heavy metal density

Heavy metal bands around the world.

Some maps are beautiful because of their rich complexity. Others capture our attention because they are so starkly simple. This map reflects the number of heavy metal bands per 100,000 inhabitants for each country in the world.

Cartography has the curious capacity to bypass a map-reader’s critical function when conveying information, and never more so than when a map is plain and simple. Two examples treated earlier on this blog spring to mind – also because they’re quite funny: the Jesusland map (#3), and the New Simplified Map of London (#199).

Jesusland is based on electoral data, the Simplified Map on a more subjective idea of wealth distribution. But both communicate a sentiment rather than merely solid data. The map shown here is less editorial, but the information it presents is equally stark.

The map above reflects the number of heavy metal bands per 100,000 inhabitants for each country in the world. It codes the result on a colour temperature scale, with blue indicating low occurrence, and red high occurrence [1]. The data for this map is taken from the extensive Encyclopaedia Metallum, an online archive of metal music that lists bands per country, and provides some background by listing their subgenre (Progressive Death Metal, Symphonic Gothic Metal, Groove Metal, etc).

Even if you barely know your Def Leppard from your Deep Purple, you won’t be surprised by the obvious point of this map: Scandinavia is the world capital of heavy metal music. Leaders of the pack are Finland and Sweden, coloured with the hottest shade of red. With 2,825 metal bands listed in the Encyclopaedia Metallum, the figure for Finland works out to 54.3 bands per 100,000 Finns (for a total of 5.2 million inhabitants [2]). Second is Sweden, with a whopping 3,398 band entries. For 9.1 million Swedes, that amounts to 37.3 metal bands per 100,000 inhabitants.

The next-hottest shade of red is coloured in by Norway [3] and Iceland. The Icelandic situation is interesting: with only 71 bands listed, the country seems not particulary metal-oriented. But the total population of the North Atlantic island is a mere 313,000. Which produces a result of 22.6 metal bands per 100,000 inhabitants. That’s almost the double, relatively speaking, of Denmark, which has a score of 12.9 (708 metal bands for 5.5 million Danes)

The following shades of colour, from dark orange to light yellow, are almost all found in North America, Europe and Australasia. A notable addition to this list of usual suspects are Israel, and the three countries of Latin America’s Southern Cone: Chile, Argentina and Uruguay.

Some interesting variations in Europe: Portugal is much darker – i.e. much more metal-oriented – than its Iberian neighbour Spain [4], and Greece is a solid southern outpost of metal on an otherwise wishy-washy Balkan Peninsula.

On the other side of the scale, light blue indicates the worst – or at least loneliest – places to be a metal fan: Papua New Guinea, North Korea, Cambodia, Afghanistan, Yemen, and most of Africa outside its northern and southern fringe. According to the Encyclopaedia Metallum, there isn’t a single metal band in any of those countries [5].

An intriguing category are the first greens next up on the colour scale. They mark out the places where metal bands are present, but in the smallest of numbers. In southern Africa, five countries [6] come up (listed below with band names and [genre]).

  • Kenya: Absence of Light [Melodic Death Metal].
  • Uganda: Threatening [Melodic Heavy Metal], and Vale of Amonition [Progressive/Doom Metal].
  • Angola: Before Crush [Metalcore], Neblina [Heavy Metal]
  • Namibia: Arcana XXII [Heavy Metal], and SubMission [Heavy Metal]
  • Mozambique: Darkest Place [Extreme Gothic Metal]

Other lands were metal is extremely marginal – yet present – include:

  • Barbados: Conrad [Black Metal]
  • Birma/Myanmar: Nightmare [Groove Metal], and The Book of Death [Groove Metal]
  • Greenland: Arctic Spirits [Heavy Metal]
  • Jamaica: Orisha Shakpana [Black Metal]
  • Qatar: Asgard Legionnaires [Heavy Metal]

And then there are the countries where you wouldn’t expect a flourishing metal scene, but that nevertheless have one. What about the 140 metal bands of Bolivia? Iran’s 42 listed metal bands include such fantastically named bands as 1,000 Funerals, Beaten Victoriouses (sic), Tenebrous Shadow, and Zakhm. Even hyper-strict Saudi Arabia has 12 entries in the Encyclopaedia Metallum.

Maybe there is still hope for world peace – via the multicultural medium of heavy metal…

If you are disoriented by the multitude of genres that are assembled under the general heading ‘metal’, check out the Map of Metal.

Via big think